Heating boiler



1968 J. M. BOVE 3,366,092

HEATING BOILER Filed May 6, 1966 5 Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTORV JOSEPH M. BOVE 3 Sheet-Sheet 2 J. M. BOVE HEATING BOILER Jan. 30, 1968 Filed May 6, 1966 INVENTOR. JOSEPH M. BOVE Jan. 30, 1968 J,-M, ovr; 3,366,092

. HEATING BOILER I Filed May 6, 1966 3 SheetsSheet 5 INV-ENTOR. JOSEPH M. BOVE United States PatentOfitice 3,366,092 HEATING BOILER Joseph M. Bove, 512 Fairmont Road, Havertown, Pa. 19083 Filed May 6, 1966, Ser. No. 548,196

' Claims. (Cl. 122-33) ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE A cast iron sectional heating boiler is provided with a tankless water heater wholly accommodated by an end section of the boiler which is of such size and weight that the boiler may be supported upon a base for a boiler of comparable size, but of the type using a tank.

This invention relates to heating boilers, and particularly to tankless or indirectly heated water heaters used with such boilers to supply domestic hot water.

It has been proposed to install a tankless water heater in an end section of a cast iron sectional heating boiler with the coil disposed below the water line. Such installations have been employed extensively in the larger sizes of heating boilers, but have never been employed to a normal extent in the smaller or compact sizes because certain difiiculties inherent in such installations have a tendency to become aggravated in the compact sizes to the point where they cannot be tolerated. As indicated, such installations have been available in the compact sizes, but cast iron sectional heating boilers of the type employing tanks, being less troublesome, have proved to be more practical, and consequently more popular. In recent years though, with the development of heating boilers having vastly improved heat transfer characteristics, cast iron sectional heating boilers with tankless heaters installed in an end section thereof have become very practical in the compact sizes, in consequence of which the tendency is for increased use of such heating boilers. But not all difficulties have been avoided.

When a tankless water heater is installed wholly within one section of the boiler, that section is, of necessity, a relatively large end section customarily with very thick, heavy walls. The weight of the section and its contents tends to overturn the boiler, making it necessary to stabilize the boiler by providing a relatively large base materially larger than is necessary for a boiler of comparable size, but of the type using a tank.

Accordingly, an important object of the invention is to provide a cast iron sectional heating boiler with a tankless water heater wholly accommodated by an end section of the boiler which is of such size and weight that the boiler may be supported upon a base for a boiler of comparable size, but of the type using a tank.

Another object is to mount the end section of the boiler accommodating the tankless water heater directly upon the base supporting the boiler. I I

Another object is to provide the end section of the boiler accommodating the tankless water heater with relatively thin walls tied together by a series of stays whereby to materially reduce the weight of the end section and thereby the tendency for the boiler to overturn.

Another object is to provide the boiler with such a tankless water heater accommodating end section and a tankless heater with interconnected parallel coil sections that straddle the stays. Another object is to provide a tankless water heater that is simple-in design and easy and economical to produce.

Other objects of the invention will become apparent when the following descriptionis read with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

3,366,092 Patented Jan. 30, 1968 FIGURE 1 is a front elevation of a compact gas fired boiler unit for hot water heating constructed in accordance with the invention, part being shown in section;

FIGURE 2 is a side elevation of the boiler unit shown in FIGURE 1, part being shown in section; and

FIGURE 3 is a diagrammatic exploded perspective view of the tankless water heater, indicating how the coils may be conveniently fabricated.

The following description is directed to the specific embodiment of the invention shown in the drawings. It is not directed to the scope of the invention, which may be practiced in a variety of forms.

The unit constructed in accordance with the invention comprises a burner base 10 supporting a boiler, generally indicated 12. As indicated in FIGURE 1, the boiler 12 is provided with a section 14 at the right thereof, an intermediate section 16 and a section 18 at the left thereof. Within the end section 18 is a tankless or indirectly heated water heater 20, and surmounting the boiler 12 is a flue collector 22.

The burner base 10 comprises a sheet metal body including a bottom wall 23, opposite side walls 24 and a rear wall 25. The top and front of the base 10 are open. The base is supported upon four legs 26. Extending across the open front of the base is a gas manifold 28, and extending from the manifold into the base through the open front thereof are a pair of mixer tubes 29 and a pair of gas burners 30. Reference may be had to my copending application, Ser. No. 488,158, filed Sept. 17, 1965, for further details of the burner base.

The end section 14 of the boiler 12 is provided with a skirt 32 seated directly upon the underlying side wall 24 of the base 10. The lower front corner of the end section 14 is provided with a connection 34 for return of water from the system to the boiler 12. Separated from the section 14 by a flueway 36 is an intermediate section 16, and separated from the section 16 by a flueway 38 is the end section 18, which is provided with a skirt 40 seated directly upon the underlying wall 24 of the base 10.

The end section 18 is also provided with a horizontally extending bottom wall 42, an upright inner side wall 44 with an offset area 46 at the top thereof, an upright outer side wall 48 with a flow connection 49 in the upper rear corner thereof, a horizontally extending top wall 50, an upright rear wall 52 and an upright front wall 54. The front wall is provided with a forwardly extending neck 56 terminating in a flange 58 defining an opening 59. The inner side wall 44 and the outer side wall 48 are interconnected by several lower stays 60, several intermediate stays 62 and several upper stays 64. Overlying the flange 58 is a gasket 66, and overlying the gasket is a mounting plate 68 secured to the flange 58 by bolts 70. Nipples 72 press fitted into suitable openings therefor in the upper rear corners thereof, and nipples 74 press fitted into suitable openings therefor in the lower front corners thereof, interconnect the boiler sections 14, 16, 18 in the usual manner.

The tankless or indirectly heated water heater 20, conveniently made of approximately twenty-eight feet of copper tubing in the order of five-eighths of an inch in diameter, comprises lower, intermediate and upper coil sections respectively designated 76, 78 and 80. A first section of the tubing, designated 82, extends through the mounting plate 68 rearwardly into the end section 18 of the boiler. A second section of the tubing extends from the section 82 back toward the plate 68 forwardly in a series of loops 84 to form the lower or first coil section 76, which embraces the section of tubing 82. The terminal portion of tends away from the plate 68 rearwardly in a series of loops 88 to form the intermediate or second coil section 78. A fourth section of the tubing, designated 90, extends from the coil section 78 back toward the plate 68 forwardly through the loops 88 of the coil section 78, whereupon it turns upwardly, as at 92, and is brazed, as at 93, to one end of a fifth section of the tubing, which forms the upper coil section 80. The fifth section of the tubing and the section 90 thereof are reversely bent to form a first loop 94 disposed in a vertical plane and a second loop 96 disposed in a horizontal plane, with one arm of the loop extending through the plate 68. The connection of the lower and upper coils 76 and 80 to the mounting plate 68, respectively designated 98 and 100, are fluid and pressure tight.

Water returns from the system to the boiler 12 through connection 34, passes from section 14 to section 16 and from section 16 to section 18 through nipple connections 72 and '74, and returns to the system through flow connection 49. Gases from the burners 30 rise through fiueways 36 and 38 and are collected in the flue collector 22, from whence they are expelled through a fiue. Thus cold water entering the boiler through the connection 34, passing through the boiler and flowing therefrom through the connection 49, is heated. Cold water enters the tankless water heater at connection 98, circulates through coil sections 76, 78 and 80 and leaves through connection 100.

The tankless water heater 20 is permanently mounted upon the plate 68 and is inserted into the end section 13 through the opening 59. The lower coil section 76 is disposed below the several intermediate stays 62, while the intermediate coil section 78 is disposed between the several intermediate stays 62 and the several upper stays 64, and the upper coil section 80 is disposed above the several upper stays 64. It will be noted that the walls of section 18 may be made comparatively thin because of the presence of stays 60, 62 and 64, which tie the walls together.

If the sectional heating boiler were of the type employing a tank, the end section 18 would be similar to the end section 14, and the boiler would measure in the order of nine and one-half inches wide by eleven and one-half inches high and fifteen and one-half inches from front to back. The boiler would not overhang one side of the base 10. However, section 18, enlarged for housing the tankless water heater 20, overhangs the base by approximately seven inches, and rises to approximately four inches above the sections 14 and 16. Nevertheless, the boiler of the present invention is stable on the base 10 because of the comparatively light weight of the section 18 and its con tents. It should be noted, too, that the section 18 is supported directly upon the underlying wall 24 of the base 10.

Referring particularly to FIGURE 3, it will be noted that the tankless water heater may be conveniently fabricated in three sections. The coil sections 76 and 78 initially may be identical in every respect (as they come from the bending machine), as illustrated in full lines. Then the extremities of the coil sections may be cut to suitable length and bent, as shown in dotted lines.

What is claimed is:

1. The combination comprising (A) a cast iron end section for a sectional heating boiler including 1) opposite side walls and front and rear end walls interconnecting said side walls, one of said end walls having an opening therein, and (2) a plurality of horizontally extending vertically spaced members each tying together opposed areas of said side walls, and (B) an indirectly heated water heater including (1 a plate closing said opening, and (2) a water conducting coil carried by said plate and consisting of a continuous length of tubing having (a) a first section extending through said plate rearwardly into the cast iron end section of said heating boiler,

(b) a second section extending from said first section forwardly toward said plate and turned about said first section to form a first rnulti-loop coil section,

(0) a third section extending from said second section rearwardly away from said plate,

(d) a fourth section extending from said third section forwardly toward said plate, said third section being turned about said fourth section to form a second multi-loop coil section, and

(e) a fifth section extending from said fourth section and terminating in a part extending forwardly through said plate, said first and second multi-loop coil sections and said tie members being disposed in vertically spaced alternate relation.

2. The combination according to claim 1 wherein the tie members are arranged in vertically spaced groups, and the tie members of each group thereof are disposed in laterally spaced planar relation to provide for the free circulation of water thereabout.

3. The combination according to claim 1 wherein the loops of each multi-loop coil section are identical with the loops of the other multi-loop coil section in shape, size, number and direction of looping.

4. In an indirectly heated water heater, the combination comprising (A) means providing a chamber having an opening in a wall thereof,

(B) a plate closing said opening, and

(C) a water conducting coil carried by said plate and consisting of a continuous length of tubing having (a) a first section extending through said plate into said chamber,

(b) a second section extending from said first section back toward said plate and turned about said first section to form a first multi-loop coil section,

(0) a third section extending from said second section away from said plate,

((1) a fourth section extending from said third section toward said plate, said third section being turned about said fourth section to form a second multi-loop coil section, and

(e) a fifth section extending from said fourth section and terminating in a part extending through said plate to the outside of said chamber, said first and second multi-loop sections being disposed in laterally spaced relation.

5. The combination according to claim 4 wherein the fourth and fifth sections of the continuous length of tubing are reversely bent whereby to provide a pair of loops, the individual loops of said first and second coil sections are generally ellipsoidal in shape, said first and second coil sections and one loop of said pair thereof are disposed in mutually overlying spaced relation with the longer sides of the loops of said coil sections extending generally parallel to the plane of said one loop of the pair thereof, and the other loop of the pair thereof and the first section of said continuous length of tubing are disposed proximate corresponding ends of the loops of said coil sections.

References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,614,542 10/ 1952 Donohue. 2,617,392 11/1952 Donohue 122225 X 2,660,410 11/1953 Hofmeister -163 3,051,145 8/1962 Donohue 122-225 CHARLES J. MYHRE, Primary Examiner. 

